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My "alternative view" is taking the Scripture at face value.
It is as old as when I read it, most recently a few minutes ago.
I could care less what some Protestant like Calvin thinks of the Scripture...
Any interpretation of "cold" as any other meaning than one of the acceptable temperature ranges of a beverage, fit for consumption, is private, by definition. It is not available in the text, therefore "private" to those in the know (Protestant tradition, in your mind, which I care not for, since many of these Protestants fail the John 16 test).
You are a modern Nicodemus, unable to grasp the earthly side of the parable...
A man picks up a mug of tea, expecting hot tea, but sadly, it has cooled to room temperature due to neglect...he spits it back out, disgusted.
The same man, fancying a quaffing of his thirst on a hot day, picks up his lemonade, only to find that it has set for hours and warmed to room temperature, and again, he spits it out.
Hot drinks refresh.
Cold drinks refresh.
Room temperature drinks disgust.
There is not one shred of a hint of a gleam of any inference to the contrary of this acceptable face value of this passage, in this passage.
Call on whichever dead Romish waif you may, to testify from the grave, still there is FIRST no private interpretation.
The wind blows through the trees, and you can't see it, but the evidence that it exists is plain, Nicky.
http://www.fundamentalforums.org/index.php?topic=5289.msg98660.msg#98660
The Protestant tradition is attested to by both Historicist and Futurists, i.e. many years, majority witness, etc. Your alternative view is an extremely minority (mainly Calvinist) and new view (i.e. post-1950s). If anyone has "private interpretation" it is those who changed the interpretation of the word "cold".Face value is primary for interpretation.
God said:
Rev 3:15-16
15 I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot.
16 So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.
Despite a multitude of interpretations to the contrary, the text does not allow for any dispersions cast against "cold", or any exaltation of "hot".
It places them as equals.
2Pe 1:20
20 Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.
Primacy established.
Please discontinue your claim to adhere to some "Protestant"(private) interpretation of this passage, it makes any salient point you have to offer to be of none effect.
My "alternative view" is taking the Scripture at face value.
It is as old as when I read it, most recently a few minutes ago.
I could care less what some Protestant like Calvin thinks of the Scripture...
Any interpretation of "cold" as any other meaning than one of the acceptable temperature ranges of a beverage, fit for consumption, is private, by definition. It is not available in the text, therefore "private" to those in the know (Protestant tradition, in your mind, which I care not for, since many of these Protestants fail the John 16 test).
You are a modern Nicodemus, unable to grasp the earthly side of the parable...
A man picks up a mug of tea, expecting hot tea, but sadly, it has cooled to room temperature due to neglect...he spits it back out, disgusted.
The same man, fancying a quaffing of his thirst on a hot day, picks up his lemonade, only to find that it has set for hours and warmed to room temperature, and again, he spits it out.
Hot drinks refresh.
Cold drinks refresh.
Room temperature drinks disgust.
There is not one shred of a hint of a gleam of any inference to the contrary of this acceptable face value of this passage, in this passage.
Call on whichever dead Romish waif you may, to testify from the grave, still there is FIRST no private interpretation.
The wind blows through the trees, and you can't see it, but the evidence that it exists is plain, Nicky.
http://www.fundamentalforums.org/index.php?topic=5289.msg98660.msg#98660